How did Johnson respond to protests in the Vietnam War? The Vietnam War will dominate the President of Linden Johnson and will determine his opinion at that time and his position in American history. The action of the Johnson administration in Vietnam greatly weakened the public image of Johnson and is very proud of Johnson. Johnson was confused about how to deal with the growing opposition to foreign policy, as the public's support for war fell quickly. Mr. Johnson is anxious for the public's support, but these pressures hoping to suppress and plead war in the government's government will outweigh the overwhelming desire of the American citizen.
At that time, Vice President Lyndon Johnson took office as the new president. As an ideal heir to New Deal, Johnson broke the conservative union in parliament and passed many laws, the Great Society. Johnson passed the major civil rights law which resumed the southern ethnic integration. At the same time, Johnson intensified the Vietnam War and ruined the party with a conflict within the Democratic Party in the 1968 election. The Democratic Party program of the 1960s was formed mainly by President Johnson's ideal of "great society". As more and more Democratic leaders expressed support for civil rights and weakened the traditional foundations of the party's southern Democratic Party and Catholics in the northern cities, the New Deal allies began to rupture.
With the arrival of the decade, the government has entered a great society of President Lyndon Johnson who purchased a social revolution far beyond Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal in the 1930s and 1940s. The Vietnam War brought extensive disillusionment and sneering about the authenticity and completeness of the government and the military. At the end of the decade, conservative Richard Nixon became a highly divided electorate with a stark Republican in the White House after the generation of a reliable Democrat in the South. It also inspires California's conservative presidents Nixon and Ronald Reagan, and George HW Bush and George W. Bush's Texas, and the rise of sunbelt as a powerful conservative force in state affairs is showing. Georgia's centralist, Jimmy Carter Democrat and Mr. Bill Clinton of Arkansas State, are representatives of Sunbelt.